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首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Alzheimer's disease: JAD >The Microbiome and Disease: Reviewing the Links between the Oral Microbiome, Aging, and Alzheimer's Disease
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The Microbiome and Disease: Reviewing the Links between the Oral Microbiome, Aging, and Alzheimer's Disease

机译:微生物组和疾病:审查口腔微生物组,老化和阿尔茨海默病之间的联系

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This review, gathered from diverse sources, shows how our microbiome influences health and ultimately how well we age. Evidence linking oral bacteria to Alzheimer's disease (AD) is discussed in the context of aging, drawing together data from epidemiological, experimental, genetic, and environmental studies. Immunosenescence results in increased bacterial load as cell-mediated and humoral immune responses wane. The innate immune system gradually takes over; contributing to the rise in circulating proinflammatory cytokines such as TNF alpha. Maintaining the integrity of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) against a backdrop of increasing bacterial load is important. Aging may favor the proliferation of anaerobes in the mouth eliciting a robust TNF alpha response from the oral epithelium. Prolonged exposure to high levels of circulating TNF alpha compromises the integrity of the BBB. Sensitive techniques now detect the "asymptomatic" presence of bacteria in areas previously thought to be sterile, providing new insights into the wider distribution of components of the microbiome. These " immune-tolerated" bacteria may slowly multiply elsewhere until they elicit a chronic inflammatory response; some are now considered causal in instances of atherosclerosis and back pain. Inflammatory processes have long been associated with AD. We propose for a subset of AD patients, aging favors the overgrowth of oral anaerobes established earlier in life provoking a pro-inflammatory innate response that weakens the BBB allowing bacteria to spread and quietly influence the pathogenesis of AD. Finally, we suggest that human polymorphisms considered alongside components of the microbiome may provide new avenues of research for the prevention and treatment of disease.
机译:从各种来源收集的审查显示了我们的微生物组如何影响健康,最终是我们年龄的程度。在老化的背景下讨论将口腔细菌与阿尔茨海默病(AD)联系起来的证据,从流行病学,实验,遗传和环境研究中汲取数据。免疫倒期导致细菌载荷增加,作为细胞介导和体液免疫应答衰退。天生的免疫系统逐渐接管;有助于循环促炎细胞因子如TNFα的兴起。保持血脑屏障(BBB)的完整性对增加细菌负荷的背景是重要的。衰老可能有利于口腔中厌氧的增殖引发来自口腔上皮的稳健的TNFα反应。长期暴露于高水平的循环TNF alpha损害了BBB的完整性。敏感技术现在检测以前认为是无菌的区域的“无症状”存在,为微生物组的组分的更宽分布提供了新的洞察。这些“免疫耐受”细菌可能在其他地方慢慢繁殖,直到它们引起慢性炎症反应;有些人现在被认为是动脉粥样硬化和背部疼痛的情况下的因果关系。炎症过程长期与广告有关。我们向AD患者的子集提出,老龄化有利于凡在生活中提前建立的口腔厌氧人的过度生长,这挑起了促使BBB的促进BBB散发和悄然影响广告发病机制。最后,我们建议认为与微生物组的组成部分相同的人类多态性可能为预防和治疗疾病进行新的研究途径。

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